Commonwealth Power Railway & Light Co. v. Vaught

231 S.W. 247, 191 Ky. 641, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 24, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 247 (Commonwealth Power Railway & Light Co. v. Vaught) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Power Railway & Light Co. v. Vaught, 231 S.W. 247, 191 Ky. 641, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 379 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming.

In January, 1919, the appellee was employed by the Southern Express Co., at Danville, Ky., as a deliveryman, and in that capacity it was his duty to deliver and to receive from shippers packages handled by the express company.

On one day in that month it became his duty to go to and_ receive from a second-story apartment on Main street in Danville for shipment a large box weighing three or four hundred pounds. The entrance to the stairway leading to this apartment was in an offset or small court between two buildings, and the pavement there extended into the offset between the two business houses, and this offset or court was a part of the pavement used by the public. At or near the entrance to the stairway was an iron cellar door composed of two iron gratings built into the pavement, and which when closed were a part of the sidewalk; this door was an entrance to the cellar of one of the buildings, and the two gratings when lifted, one to the east and one to the west, stood approximately upright but with a slight slant outward, and when so opened left an aperture of approximately three by four feet, and the depth of the cellar was about four or five feet.

Appellant entered the stairway and left his wagon at the curb; in bringing the large box down the stairway he had no assistance other than that of one or two small [643]*643hoys, and it is not clear from the evidence what actual assistance they rendered him; at any rate, in bringing’ the box down the stairway it was necessary for him to come down backwards, having hold of the front end of the box, which was three or four feet long; and either with the assistance of the boys or by dropping the other end from step to step, he managed to thus take the box down.

According to the plaintiff’s evidence, the door or gratings were closed when he entered .the stairway but were opened by appellant’s agents while he was in the apartment, and without notice to him, and he says that when he backed down the steps with the box and out on to the street, he straddled one of the iron gratings that were approximately upright and fell into the hole, the large box falling on top of him; that in his contact with th¿ iron grating his testicles were mashed and bruised and, in some way not explained, one of the knuckles on his left hand was permanently knocked down.

He was confined to his home for about three weeks and was unable to return to his work for 39 days; while he was confined to his home the doctor visited him twice and after he was able to get out he frequently 'went to the doctor’s office for treatment.

In this action for damages the jury returned a verdict for $2,500 in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant’s motion for a new trial having been overruled, it appeals.

Four grounds for reversal are insisted upon: (1) error in the instructions; (2) excessive damages; (3) the failure of appellee to minimize his damages by submitting to an operation; (4) improper argument of counsel.

(1) It was admitted that the defendant’s agents and employes opened the door into the cellar, but it was the defense that the grating was open when appellee entered the building and that an agent or employe was left on guard at the opening to warn persons using the sidewalk. There was some conflict on this issue, one of appellant’s employes testifying that he warned appellee against backing into the cellar, while appellee states that he received no such warning, and one or two other witnesses state that the agent so claiming to have warned appellee was at the time of the injury down the street some little distance away looking into a window.

So that it is apparent that the controlling question of fact in the case was, whether appellant had. an agent on [644]*644guard at the door and, whether that agent warned appellee.

In giving its instructions the court carefully followed the rule laid down in the case of DeHaven v. Danville Gas Light Co., 150 Ky. 241, in which case it was held-to be negligence as a matter of law to leave open a cellar door in a much frequented pavement without precaution being taken to protect the hole, the court holding expressly that to leave such a door open unguarded was negligence as a matter of law. In that case on a trial the jury found a verdict for the defendant, and upon appeal this court reversed that judgment because the court had submitted to the jury the question whether the defendant’s agents had negligently suffered the door to remain open, and laid down the rule that to permit a door in a sidewalk to remain open without being guarded was negligence per se.

In accord with that ruling the lower-court in this ease instructed the jury, in substance, that they should find for the plaintiff unless they should believe from the evidence that the defendant’s agent was present immediately before and at the time of the accident and warned the plaintiff of his danger ; or unless they should believe from the evidence that the plaintiff on that occasion failed to u’se ordinary care for his own safety, and that his failure contributed to the injuries to such an extent that they would not have been received but for such failure, and'that if they believed either of these two things they should find for the defendant.

It will be seen that the latter part of the court’s instruction covered the defendant’s plea of contributory negligence.

The instruction submitted the only issues upon which the defense was based, for it is not to be questioned that if the defendant’s agents opened this cellar door on the pavement and left it open without a guard, it was guilty of negligence per se, and the questions have been fairly submitted — in fact, we may say submitted with unusual clarity.

The instructions offered by the defendant in 'effect proposed to submit to the jury the issue whether the defendant’s agents had negligently left the door open and unguarded, the very thing which the court condemned in the DeHaven case.

[645]*645(2) Appellee is forty years of age and at the time of his injury was getting a salary of $75 per month. The appellant’s argument is that the damages are excessive because appellee was only shown to have been away from his work 39 days, and because no permanent injury was shown.

It is true that he remained only that length of time away from his employment, but he states in his evidence that since the injury he has not been able to do his customary work and usual lifting without pain, and that he still, at the time of the trial, nearly nine months after the injuries were received, suffered from the same, and that at the time of the injury he ‘ ‘ suffered death and was crazy from pain.”

So far as the injury to his knuckle is concerned, one of the doctors introduced testified that it will always be in the same condition, and the plaintiff and his physician each testify that he is still suffering from a bad stricture as a result of the accident, the plaintiff stating that even at the time of the trial he had great difficulty in urinating and that it was painful. His physician states that his urethra was injured and that he had a stricture as a result of the injury which caused him trouble in urinating, and the plaintiff himself states explicitly that he never had any trouble of that nature before the injury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 247, 191 Ky. 641, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-power-railway-light-co-v-vaught-kyctapp-1921.